In February,
a "tanning intervention" was made for the cast of MTV's "Jersey Shore."
Dr. Deborah S. Sarnoff, a clinical professor of dermatology at NYU Medical
Center and senior vice president of the Skin Cancer Foundation, showed
the seriously bronzed reality-show stars photos of cancerous moles she'd
removed from young patients — and a head shot of a 27-year-old Italian-American
woman who'd died of melanoma after regularly using a tanning bed.The self-described "guidos" and "guidettes"
were seemingly aghast and vowed to switch to spray tanning. But they have
since relapsed. Fortunately, if the Cancer doesn't get them, Premature
Aging, and wrinkling like a Prune is the Alternative.

'Jersey Shore' and the Dark Side
of Too Much TanningThe New Jersey Record; Virginia Rohan;
Tuesday, July 6, 2010

In February, "Extra" staged a "tanning
intervention" for the cast of MTV's "Jersey Shore."Dr. Deborah S. Sarnoff, a clinical
professor of dermatology at NYU Medical Center and senior vice president
of the Skin Cancer Foundation, showed the seriously bronzed reality-show
stars photos of cancerous moles she'd removed from young patients — and
a head shot of a 27-year-old Italian-American woman who'd died of melanoma
after regularly using a tanning bed.The self-described "guidos" and "guidettes"
were seemingly aghast and vowed to switch to spray tanning.But they've since been photographed
sunning, and in a preview clip from season two, which kicks off July 29,
Nicole "Snooki" Polizzi blasts the fact that Obama's health care reform
bill included a 10 percent federal tax on indoor tanning, which went into
effect last Thursday. She blamed that (not health concerns) for why she
switched to spray tan."The sad thing is, I think they've
relapsed," says Sarnoff. "These 'Jersey Shore' kids are in a lot of ways
role models for the young kids coming up. … When they do their little thing
about gym, tanning, young kids are very impressionable at that age, and
they equate that with cool."Dr. Jonathan Blume, a Westwood dermatologist
who has treated patients in their 20s for melanoma, basal-cell carcinoma
and squamous-cell carcinoma, agrees. "Unfortunately, what we see on TV
tends to be sometimes more powerful than the message you get from the doctor,"
he says. "And right now, being tan is still in style."Until the Roaring Twenties, the style
was to preserve one's natural skin color, as sunburns and tans were something
field laborers got.By many accounts, the tan-is-beautiful
trend started in 1923, when French designer Coco Chanel was photographed
leaving an aristocrat's yacht with a deep suntan. By then, many people
were working indoors and envying the rich, who were playing outdoors.Today, parents know to slather their
children in sunblock, and many grown-ups have gotten the message about
the dangers of ultraviolet radiation — both UVB rays, which causes sunburn,
skin damage and potentially skin cancer, and deeper-penetrating UVA rays,
which the indoor tanning industry claims are safer but doctors say penetrate
deeper to cause damage.

Looks can be deceivingAnd yet, the concept that a tan looks
healthy prevails.Although spray-on glows and self-bronzers
are, as far as they can tell, safe, doctors say, actual tanning, especially
the indoor variety, is anything but healthy. According to the American
Academy of Dermatology, "a review of seven studies found a 75 percent increase
in the risk of melanoma in those who had been exposed to UV radiation from
indoor tanning before the age of 35."Dermatologists would like to see
indoor tanning undergo an image change similar to that of cigarette smoking,
which has gone from glamorous-looking pastime to dangerous addiction.Nonetheless, they acknowledge that
it's an uphill battle against the indoor tanning industry, which vigorously
rebuts the health risks."There have been quite a few studies
on the relationship between indoor tanning devices and melanoma and the
science is all over the place. The vast majority, probably two-thirds,
show no relationship," says John Overstreet, executive director of the
Indoor Tanning Association, which represents some 19,000 tanning salons
in the U.S."They have to make it sound much
worse and much more definitive than it actually is, in order to get the
attention of people."Indoor tanning gets lots of free
publicity from reality TV stars, and not only those on "Jersey Shore."
On Style Network's "Jerseylicious," for example, one young woman is so
addicted to indoor tanning, that she goes from salon to salon so she can
exceed the recommended exposure.

Reckless exposure"It's so dangerous and she's just
clueless," says Kate White, editor in chief of Cosmopolitan, which has
run more than 20 articles as part of an ongoing "Practice Safe Sun" campaign
and did an undercover tanning-bed investigation with "20/20" recently."It's like she's trying to convince
young people to smoke, because tanning beds are now classified as a carcinogen."
White was mobilized by a radio story she heard in 2005 about how melanoma
had become the second most prevalent cancer for women in their 20s."It's now No. 1, but at the time
it was No. 2, and I was shocked, because you sort of think [of] melanoma
as something you get as you age," says White..There are signs of progress.White says she no longer sees that
"deep-tan" look on the models that come into Cosmo or appear in magazine
ads, nor on people she sees in New York City. She also cites the popularity
of creamy-skinned actresses Carey Mulligan (the upcoming "Wall Street"
sequel) and the "Twilight" saga's Kristen Stewart.

Spray tanner on siteThe message even seems to have reached
some corners of the reality world. ABC's "Dancing With the Stars," for
example, has a professional spray tanner and a makeup artist who does "tan
sculpting" for cast members.And Mahwah's Jaqueline Madden of
VH1's "You're Cut Off!" says she used to "tan a lot" in indoor beds, but
switched to "personalized spray tanning" because of news stories about
links to skin cancer and premature aging."I'm 23 and there are girls my age
that are dying of melanoma. It's very scary," says Madden, an actress and
singer, who also worries about wrinkles. "When I'm 30, I don't want to
look like I'm 50. I want to look like I'm 20."